Individualized estimation of human core body temperature using noninvasive measurements

A rising core body temperature (T ) during strenuous physical activity is a leading indicator of heat-injury risk. Hence, a system that can estimate T in real time and provide early warning of an impending temperature rise may enable proactive interventions to reduce the risk of heat injuries. Howev...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied physiology (1985) 2018-06, Vol.124 (6), p.1387-1402
Hauptverfasser: Laxminarayan, Srinivas, Rakesh, Vineet, Oyama, Tatsuya, Kazman, Josh B, Yanovich, Ran, Ketko, Itay, Epstein, Yoram, Morrison, Shawnda, Reifman, Jaques
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A rising core body temperature (T ) during strenuous physical activity is a leading indicator of heat-injury risk. Hence, a system that can estimate T in real time and provide early warning of an impending temperature rise may enable proactive interventions to reduce the risk of heat injuries. However, real-time field assessment of T requires impractical invasive technologies. To address this problem, we developed a mathematical model that describes the relationships between T and noninvasive measurements of an individual's physical activity, heart rate, and skin temperature, and two environmental variables (ambient temperature and relative humidity). A Kalman filter adapts the model parameters to each individual and provides real-time personalized T estimates. Using data from three distinct studies, comprising 166 subjects who performed treadmill and cycle ergometer tasks under different experimental conditions, we assessed model performance via the root mean squared error (RMSE). The individualized model yielded an overall average RMSE of 0.33 (SD = 0.18)°C, allowing us to reach the same conclusions in each study as those obtained using the T measurements. Furthermore, for 22 unique subjects whose T exceeded 38.5°C, a potential lower T limit of clinical relevance, the average RMSE decreased to 0.25 (SD = 0.20)°C. Importantly, these results remained robust in the presence of simulated real-world operational conditions, yielding no more than 16% worse RMSEs when measurements were missing (40%) or laden with added noise. Hence, the individualized model provides a practical means to develop an early warning system for reducing heat-injury risk. NEW & NOTEWORTHY A model that uses an individual's noninvasive measurements and environmental variables can continually "learn" the individual's heat-stress response by automatically adapting the model parameters on the fly to provide real-time individualized core body temperature estimates. This individualized model can replace impractical invasive sensors, serving as a practical and effective surrogate for core temperature monitoring.
ISSN:8750-7587
1522-1601
1522-1601
DOI:10.1152/japplphysiol.00837.2017